Scottish cereal harvest in 2018 affected by extreme weather

It has been particularly bad for barley and wheat crops, which resulted in a number of farmers choosing to whole-crop due to the low yield and quality
It has been particularly bad for barley and wheat crops, which resulted in a number of farmers choosing to whole-crop due to the low yield and quality

Cereal production and the area of cereals grown in Scotland have decreased in 2018 due to the severe winter and sustained heatwave in the summer.

The final estimates for the 2018 cereal and oilseed rape harvest in Scotland were released this week.

Around 420,000 hectares of cereals have been grown this year, three per cent lower than 2017.

This drop in area, combined with a nine per cent decrease in yield, led to a 12 per drop in production, to 2.5 million tonnes.

This was due to the unfavourable weather conditions experienced in winter 2017, as well as spring and early summer of 2018.

It has been particularly bad for barley and wheat crops, which resulted in a number of farmers choosing to whole-crop due to the low yield and quality.

Barley decrease

The figures, released by Scotland’s Chief Statistician, showed that spring barley, Scotland’s main cereal crop, experienced a fall in yield of six per cent and production fell by three per cent.

Although the area of spring barley increased by three per cent, yields and production were down due to the bad weather during the last year.

Winter barley was also affected by the poor weather, with area dropping by a fifth.

This, along with a four per cent drop in yield resulted in production decreasing by a 24 per cent. This was the lowest production tonnage since 1993 and the lowest area since records started in 1982.

Wheat, oats and OSR

Wheat production has decreased, due to area grown decreasing by nine per cent and the yield decreasing by 16 per cent.

Oats and oilseed rape also seen reductions in area, yield and production over the last year.

Final estimates of the Scottish Cereal and Oilseed Rape Harvest are based on final yield results from the 2018 Cereal Production Survey.

These are combined with final crop areas from the 2018 June census to produce production totals.

Final estimates were broadly similar to the first estimates published in October 2018.

Differences in the first and final estimates are due to the amount of information available when calculating first estimates.